News

With inflation creeping back into the US economy, it's as important as ever to have a firm grasp on Donald Trump's tariffs and what they mean.
Neither consumers nor foreign countries are assuming much of the tariff burden. At least not yet.
After President Trump said that tariffs could be set at a baseline level of 15%, economists projected that consumer prices ...
A slew of countries will face steep levies, including a 50% tariff on imports from Brazil and a 30% tariff on the European ...
TRADE officials said Thursday, July 24, 2025, that negotiations on the specifics of the 19 percent tariff on Philippine exports, down from the 20 percent announ ...
In a research note, Deutsche Bank analysts contradicted the White House’s assertions that foreign exporters are on the hook ...
CFO Ahmed Moghal commented, "Adjusted EBITDA increased by 7% year-over-year to $1.21 billion despite lower revenue, driven by strong margin expansion across both segments," and confirmed free cash ...
In a major breakthrough ahead of a looming tariff deadline, US President Donald Trump announced a trade pact with Japan that ...
DBS Bank remains constructive on gold despite the current wave of consolidation. There remains a multitude of long-term ...
Trade, production, growth and other global economic vitals are proving resilient almost four months after President Trump’s ...
For the moment, because the data has yet to reflect anything other than the earliest impact of Trump’s less impactful tariffs, the only dissonant note within the markets is being sounded by the market ...
Tariffs pose rising inflation and rate cut risks for H2 2025 as CPI data hints at early price pressures in key goods. See why ...